Samsung 9100 Pro Gen 5×4 SSD – FINALLY!!!

Samsung Unveils 9100 PRO PCIe 5.0 SSD with Up to 14,800 MB/s Speeds and 8TB Capacity

IMPORTANT – The Samsung 9100 Pro SSD is Now LIVE and my Review can be found HERE on YouTube or HERE on the Blog.

(Original Article Below)

Samsung has officially launched its 9100 PRO Series, marking its first full-fledged PCIe 5.0 NVMe SSD and its most powerful consumer storage solution to date. Designed to meet the growing demands of AI workloads, high-performance computing, 8K video editing, and gaming, this SSD delivers sequential read speeds of up to 14,800 MB/s, making it nearly twice as fast as its predecessor, the 990 PRO. The 9100 PRO lineup includes capacities of 1TB, 2TB, 4TB, and 8TB, catering to both professionals and power users requiring high-speed data access and extensive storage capacity. With the introduction of a more power-efficient 5nm controller, improved thermal management, and a choice between heatsink and non-heatsink versions, Samsung aims to push PCIe 5.0 adoption forward while setting a new benchmark for consumer SSDs.

Samsung 9100 Pro SSD Hardware and Specifications

The Samsung 9100 PRO is built using Samsung’s in-house PCIe 5.0 controller and V-NAND TLC (V8) flash memory, providing a significant increase in performance, reliability, and efficiency. Unlike its predecessors, the 9100 PRO utilizes the NVMe 2.0 protocol, enabling better optimizations for high-speed workloads. It is equipped with LPDDR4X DRAM-based caching to further enhance performance, ensuring that data retrieval and transfer speeds remain consistent under heavy loads. Power efficiency has been improved by 49% compared to the 990 PRO, allowing the drive to operate at lower power consumption levels, with an active power draw ranging from 7.6W to 9.0W depending on the model. For added security, the 9100 PRO supports AES 256-bit encryption, TCG Opal 2.0, and Microsoft eDrive, making it a viable option for enterprise-level security and personal data protection.

Samsung 9100 PRO Specifications

Specification 1TB 2TB 4TB 8TB
Interface PCIe 5.0 x4, NVMe 2.0
Form Factor M.2 (2280) / M.2 (2280 with Heatsink)
NAND Samsung V-NAND TLC (V8)
Controller Samsung In-House Controller
Cache Memory 1GB LPDDR4X 2GB LPDDR4X 4GB LPDDR4X 8GB LPDDR4X
Sequential Read/Write (MB/s) 14,700 / 13,300 14,700 / 13,400 14,800 / 13,400 14,800 / 13,400
Random Read/Write (IOPS, QD32) 1,850K / 2,600K 1,850K / 2,600K 2,200K / 2,600K 2,200K / 2,600K
Power Consumption (Active Read/Write, W) 7.6 / 7.2 8.1 / 7.9 9.0 / 8.2 TBD
Device Sleep (L1.2, mW) 4.0 / 3.3 4.8 / 4.0 6.5 / 5.7 TBD
Intelligent TurboWrite 2.0 Cache 114GB 226GB 442GB TBD
Data Encryption AES 256-bit, TCG Opal v2.0, MS eDrive (IEEE1667)
Total Bytes Written (TBW) 600 1,200 2,400 4,800
Warranty Five (5) Year Limited Warranty

Samsung 9100 Pro vs Samsung 990 EVO and EVO Plus

The Samsung 9100 PRO SSD is a pretty big jump in storage performance, surpassing previous consumer SSDs like the 990 EVO and EVO Plus in nearly every metric. While the 990 EVO and EVO Plus were developed to meet the needs of mainstream users looking for a balance of performance and affordability, the 9100 PRO is engineered specifically for professionals, power users, and high-performance computing environments. One of the most significant differences is the interface upgrade, with the 9100 PRO utilizing PCIe 5.0 x4—a major step up from the 990 EVO’s PCIe 4.0 and the EVO Plus’s PCIe 3.0. This translates to dramatically higher sequential read and write speeds, where the 9100 PRO reaches up to 14,800 MB/s read and 13,400 MB/s write speeds, whereas the 990 EVO maxes out at 5,000 MB/s read and 4,800 MB/s write, and the EVO Plus is limited to 3,500 MB/s read and 3,200 MB/s write. These figures alone make the 9100 PRO nearly three times faster than the EVO Plus and close to three times faster than the 990 EVO, delivering unprecedented speed for workloads like 8K video editing, AI processing, and high-resolution content creation.

Beyond raw speed, the 9100 PRO also dominates in efficiency, endurance, and storage capacity, areas where Samsung has significantly improved upon its previous SSD lineup. The 9100 PRO features an endurance rating of up to 4,800 TBW (Total Bytes Written) for the 8TB model, whereas the 990 EVO and EVO Plus are capped at 600 TBW, meaning the 9100 PRO can handle up to eight times the write cycles before reaching its lifespan limit. This enhanced durability makes it ideal for workstations and AI applications where large datasets are continuously processed and rewritten. Furthermore, Samsung has introduced an 8TB model in the 9100 PRO lineup, a first for its consumer NVMe SSDs, whereas the 990 EVO is limited to 4TB and the EVO Plus maxes out at 2TB. Power efficiency has also been improved by up to 49%, thanks to the 5nm controller used in the 9100 PRO, allowing it to maintain higher performance while consuming less power per operation. These advancements make the 9100 PRO not just an incremental upgrade but a transformative SSD in Samsung’s lineup, aimed squarely at professionals who demand uncompromising speed, reliability, and storage capacity.

Specification Samsung 9100 PRO Samsung 990 EVO Samsung 990 EVO PLUS
Interface PCIe 5.0 x4, NVMe 2.0 PCIe 4.0 x4, NVMe 1.4 PCIe 3.0 x4, NVMe 1.3
Form Factor M.2 (2280) / M.2 (2280 with Heatsink) M.2 (2280) M.2 (2280)
NAND Samsung V-NAND TLC (V8) Samsung V-NAND TLC Samsung V-NAND TLC
Controller Samsung In-House Controller Samsung In-House Controller Samsung In-House Controller
Cache Memory 1GB – 8GB LPDDR4X 1GB – 2GB LPDDR4 None
Sequential Read (MB/s) 14,700 – 14,800 5,000 3,500
Sequential Write (MB/s) 13,300 – 13,400 4,800 3,200
Random Read (IOPS, QD32) 1,850K – 2,200K 800K 600K
Random Write (IOPS, QD32) 2,600K 1,000K 550K
Power Consumption (Active, W) 7.6W – 9.0W 5.3W – 5.9W 4.5W – 5.0W
Device Sleep (L1.2, mW) 4.0mW – 6.5mW 5mW 5mW
Total Bytes Written (TBW) 600 – 4,800 TB 600TB 600TB
Warranty 5-Year Limited Warranty 5-Year Limited Warranty 5-Year Limited Warranty

TurboWrite – What is it?

The 9100 PRO Series introduces Samsung’s Intelligent TurboWrite 2.0, a highly optimized SLC caching system that significantly improves write speeds and overall performance consistency. amsung TurboWrite is a technology used in Samsung SSDs to make them faster. Think of it like a temporary speed boost for writing data.

  1. Creates a Fast Cache – The SSD sets aside a small part of its storage as a high-speed buffer (like a VIP lane for data).
  2. Speeds Up Writes – When you save files, they first go into this super-fast buffer, making it seem like the SSD is writing faster.
  3. Moves Data in the Background – Later, when the SSD is idle, it moves the data from the fast cache to the main storage.

Faster file transfers (especially for small/medium-sized files).
Better everyday performance (like booting Windows, opening apps, or saving documents).
⚠️ Slows down for big files – If you copy very large files that fill up the TurboWrite cache, the speed drops to the SSD’s normal (slower) write speed.

Unlike conventional SSDs, which experience a performance drop once the primary cache is exhausted, TurboWrite dynamically allocates NAND capacity as an extended cache, maintaining peak speeds for longer durations. The cache size is based on drive capacity, with 114GB allocated for 1TB models, 226GB for 2TB, and up to 442GB for 4TB variants. This feature ensures high-speed data transfers and minimizes write slowdowns, especially beneficial for video editors, software developers, and content creators working with large datasets.

Samsung 9100 Pro SSD Durability and Endurance

The Samsung 9100 PRO is designed with long-term endurance in mind, featuring Total Bytes Written (TBW) ratings of up to 4,800TB for the 8TB variant. This translates to 0.328 Drive Writes Per Day (DWPD), meaning users can rewrite roughly one-third of the drive’s full capacity daily for five years without exceeding its rated lifespan. This makes it ideal for sustained workloads, AI processing, and enterprise environments that require consistent, high-speed storage. Compared to previous-generation SSDs, the 9100 PRO offers significantly improved durability, reducing the risk of performance degradation over time.

Samsung 9100 Pro SSD Pricing and Release Information

The Samsung 9100 PRO SSD will launch in March 2025 with the following pricing:

  • 1TB$199.99
  • 2TB$299.99
  • 4TB$549.99
  • 8TBComing in H2 2025 (pricing TBD)

The heatsink versions will be available for $20 more per model. Given its groundbreaking performance, improved efficiency, and increased storage capacity, the 9100 PRO is set to become one of the leading PCIe 5.0 SSDs in the market, competing with Seagate’s FireCuda 540 and Crucial’s T700.

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      153 thoughts on “Samsung 9100 Pro Gen 5×4 SSD – FINALLY!!!

      1. Has anyone tested this with pcie 4.0? i keep getting conflicting reports it is not backwards compatible but all nvme ssds have been so i find that hard to believe
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      2. Hey, I have a video request since I found it pretty much impossible to find anything like this on YouTube.

        Could you run a comparison between a high-end NVME, (like the 9100, t705 ect) versus a very old SATA SSD.

        I see tons of videos comparing the difference in low times between ssd’s and hdd’s, but I have not been able to find anything that compares an old version of something versus a new version of something.

        I’m trying to figure out if my 10-year-old SSD is worth upgrading, and all I can find is that SSDs are much faster than HDDs, not anything comparing an “old apple” vs a “new apple” basically I’m trying to see if real world numbers, upgrading from an old “fast” drive to a new fast drive would actually be a noticeable difference.

        The only comparisons I can find on YouTube are comparing one technology versus another. Never within the same category.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      3. Great technological advancement, but who really needs this? I use a 970 EVO Plus as my Windows boot drive since I don’t want the hassle of changing it, and a 980 Pro for my games. I also have some games on the 970 EVO Plus, and I just can’t tell the difference in loading speed. We’ve reached a point of diminished returns with PCIe 3.0—it’s already so fast that a casual gamer doesn’t need anything more. This is mostly for extreme enthusiasts or data centers, etc. Regardless, it’s pretty awesome, don’t get me wrong, but it’ll take a long time before this becomes the standard.
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      4. Ever hear of a company called Crucial? I ask that half kidding as you entirely ignored them. They had the T700 doing approx 11,400 read in 2023 and the T705 now at well over 14,000.
        Nothing Samsung has FINALLY done here is new or innovative. for all the Samsung fan boys only took 2 years. Life’s way too short.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      5. Physically how I predict they will get a 8TB drive is by having 2 more 1TB NAND Flash chips. The issue will be with the controller to address 5 chips instead of 3. 5 Being the DRAM chip and the 4 1TB NAND Flash chips. The other issue will be space as a 4 chip M.2 drive will be a longer drive so 22110 instead of 2280. It will will bit into most newer motherboards as most do support 1 22110 M.2 drive just not the slot connected directly to the CPU which trends to be the only M.2 slot with PCIe.
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      6. Hey would recommend you do chaptering in the video. It’s difficult to find the benchmark section. Also did you do speedtest at various capacities? BIG issue with SSD’s is that their writespeed drops off severely as they get more full.
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      7. I am sure that my 990 Pro 2TB will serve me well for couple more years in the notebook, will replace next notebook with this 990 Pro, but need to get another 4TB 990 Pro (or the like) for gaming PC. PCI-E 5.0 nvme, like 9100 Pro, is simply too fast for my needs, don’t want to overpay.
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      8. Great videos ! I have a question / advice. I have a disk based Synology NAS (8 drives) and would like to switch to M.2, for the sake of using less power and getting some more speed. Synology does not seem to be willing to offer such things, and although I love their OS, I might switch. What would be the best option ?
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      9. If you are looking at NAS or server use then I would want something as durable as possible, and there the 9100 Pro isn’t all bad. But it’s still far from the top.
        As said in the video the TBW is listed as:
        600 for the 1TB drive, 1200 for the 2TB drive, 2400 for the 4TB drive and 4800 for the 8TB drive.
        Decent numbers but not reaching the top. Lets compare with the TBW of the Seagate Firecuda 530R as an example. It has a TBW of:
        1100 for the 1 TB drive, 2400 for the 2TB drive and 5050 for the 4TB drive.
        See how the TBW numbers are about twice as high for the Firecuda? Sure it’s slower, “just” a Gen4 drive but it is a hell of a lot more durable. Now I’m sure there are other Gen5 drives that has real good TBW numbers, but I couldn’t remember any details as I haven’t been all that interested in Gen5 drives. The point is there are a lot of drives with better durability than the Samsung 9100 Pro, and you don’t even have to go to the real expensive professional drives to find them. One of my favorites are the Kingston Fury Renegade drives. There the TBW numbers are:
        1000 for the 1TB drive, 2000 for the 2TB drive and 4000 for the 4TB drive.
        They are also pretty fast Gen4 drives and sell at a very affordable price.

        Now the Firecuda and Fury Renegade are not the average drives out there. For instance the Fire Renegade is the only drives from Kingston with high TBW rating. the others range from very low to pretty standard. A brand that also has pretty low TBW rating is Crucial, and Kioxia also seems to have pretty low TBW rating, at least for their consumer products. It’s possible they have a professional range that have better TBW rating.

        Now so far the TBW is just a number, but it seems to also be visible in the user comments on the drives at different webstores. One thing to be aware of is that when something fails people are a lot more likely to bother logging in to write a review than if it just does what it’s supposed to. So in general User Reviews on these sites tend to highlight problems. I’ve read a lot of user reviews of SSD drives and the Kingston Fury Renegade has pretty much stellar user reviews. When the number of reviews stack up real high there are usually a number who has posted after a drive died on them, and those are very rare among the reviews for the Fury Renegade. Some of the most negative reviews I’ve seen was from people who bought the drive with a heatsink attached and had a hard time or even failed to remove that heatsink. Other than that it seems bullet proof.
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      10. Just looking for drives that can deal with really large 500GB+ writes and not drop off massively in speed. Want to see the drop after DRAM cache fills then SLC/Turbo cache fills then at what point as filling the drive it starts to slow – both from just constant write but also where it drops off in speed from fresh test at certain capacity filled
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      11. My max price/GB is €50/1TB in NVMe (3.0). There was a time when that was possible even on dramless 4.0 drives from big brands. Its the same price cycle that DDR always have since time immemorial (cartel pricing).
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      12. Most excellent video – Z890, AMD AM5 boards don’t have enough M2 slots on board that can use SSD Gen 5 without it hitting / halving the bandwidth for the PCE-x16 Graphics card; So would invest in the Graphics Card first followed by M2 NVME’s and at moment for the $$ Gen 4 SSD’s are very good indeed – can build a good raid of 4 x 4 TB NVME for about £/$1000K with reads and writes up to 7.8K – can raid them into a Raid 5 – RAID 5 can improve read speeds via Data Striping. However if the price of SSD person is purchasing like a 2 TB expansion and Gen 4, Gen 5 is near to each other in terms of price then the NVME Gen 5 M2 would be one to go for. Prices should be similar up to 2 TB ( at moment, 4TB onwards there is a big gap between Gen 4 and gen 5.
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      13. Why are NVMe drives still stuck in 250gb to 2TB(fairly affordable)…once you cross this, it gets super expensive!!!!
        We’re in 2025….4TB should be the standard!!!
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      14. Nice video. I’ve been making a lot of losses trying to make a perfect trading. I thought trading on a demo account was just like trading the real market. Can anyone help me out or at least advise me on what to do?
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      15. Just pre order the 9100 2tb for 250 euros , and im bulding my new pc just wainting for a new motherboard cause the first one was faulty , had 990 pro already just wanted the gen5 , its going to be fire with 9800x3d and 5080 ????
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      16. This drive is already on sale with delivery tomorrow at a whole bunch of stores in Australia. I’m shocked there isn’t like 100 reviews of those drive on youtube yet… 🙂 so strange Release for sale but not for review.. WHAT IS Samsung doing?
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      17. I’m glad Samsung took their time. Their little firmware oopsie probably stun a lot and they want to make sure they nail this so they can reclaim the non-enterprise performance crown and hold it.
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      18. Cooling gen 5 SSDs is more challenging compared to gen 4. Hopefully there will be better solutions in the near future. I am happy to see greater storage options and improved TBW.
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      19. I have been waiting forever for these drives to come out. On day one I plan to purchase four of the 4TB drives and putting them in a raid 0 in my workstation machine. Gonna see some crazy numbers then.
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      20. I heard some gen5 ssds might not be running hot depending on the controller and so on
        …it will be interesting to check out if some actually run a bit cooler than average
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      21. Its sad to see WD not make anymore ssd I was expecting them to launch a WD SN950x to compete against the 990 pro but it looks like online I’ve been hearing they won’t be making anymore ssd or hdds
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      22. Its sad to see WD not make anymore ssd I was expecting them to launch a WD SN950x to compete against the 990 pro but it looks like online I’ve been hearing they won’t be making anymore ssd or hdds
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      23. gen5 why? I want to underclock m.2 drives that won’t cook my NAS. Why am I paying for obscene speed when I want quantity and longevity. Running faster than I’ll notice and cooking my equipment makes no sense.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      24. People need to come to terms with the fact that sequential read and write numbers are not everything, even if we technically can fully saturate at gen 5 x4 limits in some circumstances, the IOPS, random read/write, and smaller sizes not reaching anywhere near a rated limit just go to show that even the best Gen 5 drive can’t be maxed out in all circumstances under even gen 3 connectivity.

        It’s a damn shame that intel gave up on 3DXPoint.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      25. When you talk 8TB drives I would be happy with a good drive (high TBW) Gen 3 drive if it was cheap. After all a lot of what I store is large video files and I don’t need incredible performance for those as I don’t edit them, they are for playback only. So large and slow is OK, but it has to be very reliable even then.
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      26. at 13.4GB/s, we would need something like 20 of these (and 80 PCIe gen 5 lanes) to get bandwidth comparable to that of moderate amounts of RAM (roughly equivalent to 6 channels of DDR5-6000). Processors with this many Gen 5 lanes already exist. Also, the theoretical maximum bandwidth of 4 gen 5 lanes is 15.8GB/s.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      27. Day to day users are hella wont notice the deference in the speed upgrade. Linus did a video about 4 years ago to test if people would notice the deference from sata to gen 4 nmve without seeing benchmarks and every time they didn’t notice the deference, and picked the sata sad as the fastest showing without doing benchmarks you wont notice the speed upgrade. In that its a waste of money if you want to spend that money go for a higher capacity ssd which you will definitely notice.
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      28. I don’t understand the hate for pcie x2 drives. I think more should be made. Sequential numbers rarely matter, it’s more about capacity, latency, and maybe IOPS.

        They are better than SATA. And pcie lanes are limited, particularly on the more economical systems.
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      29. the most expansive, the most feature proof, but you forgot: the most problematic, the most DOA and the most bricks….

        yep, the 990 pro is maybe newwer but he is also with so much trubles and risk that a lot of people just ignore it.
        even if they fixed it, will you take the risk….?
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      30. Excellent overview, thank you!!???????? …was wondering which choice minimizes thermal impact… i.e., is on board dram is generally hotter, vs controller activity for use of host mem.
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      31. I was looking at getting the 990 evo i bought it because its newer i got 1tb but then i thought i need more space so i started looking around and found this video i just cancelled the order im now getting the 980 pro 2tb way more cheaper holy cow the 990 evo 2tb is like $400 and the 980 pro 2tb is $200 thanks for saving me some money ???? sharing this video around now this is super helpful!
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      32. I want to upgrade my Lenovo 20s6 001sus. It currently has a 256Gb 2TB M.2 2280 SSD in it. I want to get a 2tb and think Samsung EVO or PRO 990 look good. What would you suggest for this machine? I use it as a work machine and have Database & CAD apps. Excellent video too!
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      33. Pcie 5.0 compatibility on the evo is not a pro for laptos/mini PCs. Its running 2x which is the exact same as 4x on PCIe 4.0. Theres no speed increase and it will have a dedicated slot with 4 lanes minimum be it PCIe 4.0 or 5.0. The only benefit is for pro-somer that have a motherboard where the pcie 5.0 PCIe lanes are shared with the m.2 slots.
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      34. It really sucks that they have made the EVO models so much worse than they used to be…Even the Pro models aren’t what they used to be…My 970 EVO has Dram cache and uses TLC nand, and my 970 Pro used true MLC (2-bit) nand which gives you a crazy 1200 TBW rating for the 1TB model…These new ones seem like a step backward, but thats just how things go these days…I just ordered 3 990 Pros because I can’t bring myself to spend that much on a drive that doesn’t even have a Dram cache…
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      35. I am looking for a 1TB SSD for my Dell G7 7588, which supports Gen 3. Considering that all three options exceed my laptop’s maximum capabilities, would it be correct to assume that any of the three would work equally well, and it would be best to purchase the most economical one?
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      36. I snagged a 990Evo for 130$ and i was uneducated on its specs, thought i was getting a steal.

        I currently have a silicone 3/4 2tb as a main storage drive and booting drive

        Nd i needed somthing for games and general storage so i thought the 990Evo would be a good choice.

        Should i stick with the Evo or return it ?
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      37. I’ve put a t705 in a gen 4 slot. I want to know how a gen 5 will perform in a gen 4 slot? Obviously I’m limited to gen4 speeds but will it max the capability of gen4?
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      38. I bought the 990 evo without thinking and without seeing any videos, and now after seeing the reviews I regret it… ???????? they say it gets to 112 C degrees which is insane.. idk what to do now.
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      39. What I need when looking to replace my SSD. Just a question…from your opinion..among those 3, which one better for laptop spectre x360 bought in 2021. The internal SSD is Samsung as well. Not a gamer at all…just for video editing for the most
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      40. What I hate with these improved speeds now is that I can’t start a game and go make a coffee….
        I’ve purchade the 990 Pro recently but am slowly building my PC so I can’t comment on it. I just know that it seems to be the SSD to get atm.
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      41. Thanks for the video , really helpful. I am in the market for a new nvme and didnt knew who to buy.
        To clone my old ssd (not samsung) to the new samsung nvme probably after this video 980 pro, can i use the data migration on the samsung magician app and be done with it in one click ? My new nvme will be larger than the old ssd so i am not sure if i had to do anything extra for the partitions. I want to just clone my data to the new one and work like one larg nvme
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      42. Before buying any of these Samsung drives, call their customer support. realise how awful and rude they are. then Buy a drive that’s high quality from another supplier.
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      43. Great video! This was super helpful in helping me decide what I will be doing for the ssd upgrades for my new Samsung Galaxy Book4 Pro which can run two m.2 pcie 4.0 ssd’s. Planning on buying Two 990 Pro’s (4 TB each) to replace the standard 1 TB SSD the laptop comes with. I’m not a hardware IT Technical Guy but you did an excellent job making it easy to understand in lay man terms — I work in Construction & Civil Engineering and often need to run hardcore 3D model renderings for roads, bridges, and highways for government agency clients so this was great!
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      44. Lost my funny comment so how’s about just the ???? for your great work. Love the channel you have been so helpful fir a retired engineeer trying to catch up quickly on device hardware. Always watching you first as I feel your content is alway honest and straight forward to AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS 7940HS 9-Ba 2.5G LAN 9xSATA3.0 2xM.2 NVMe Mainboard build. I hope this week you have everything you need. I also would like it if you can update me on aggregating the 2.5Gb nic connections. Perhaps performance, utilization, efficiency in aggregation, fail over, and just the general advantages of aggregating these perhaps over 1 – 10Gb NIC. Thanks alway!
        REPLY ON YOUTUBE

      45. Why didn’t you run a test on the “Kingston FURY Renegade” when I formatted on first time on my “PS5 Slim” the read speed was “6908 MB/s” it’s highest speed from all your SSD’s you have tested. Can you do test on it please.
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      46. In the US here. Got a 1TB 980 Pro in my Laptop a year ago. But now only have 200GB free space, so was looking to replace with a 2TB. Right now, both the 980 Pro and 990 Pro 2TB are the same price $169.
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      47. l got the Samsung 990 PRO Heatsink 2TB PCIe 4.0 for £138 now =£191 and Samsung 980 PRO SSD with Heatsink 2 TB for £139.97 both work great you just have to keep look them up
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      48. Completely ignored the one factor I need to know — HEAT. If I need something for a laptop, do any of these run so hot that a heatsink is recommended? Some nvme heatsinks are so thicc that they won’t fit inside a laptop.
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      49. With ssds running so hot nowadays, I wonder how they would fair in that 2nd ssd slot on the back of my motherboard, cooking itself in that little gap between the case and motherboard.
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